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Distinguishing Encrypted Data From Random Data?

gust5av writes "I'm working on a little script to provide very simple and easy to use steganography. I'm using bash together with cryptsetup (without LUKS), and the plausible deniability lies in writing to different parts of a container file. On decryption you specify the offset of the hidden data. Together with a dynamically expanding filesystem, this makes it possible to have an arbitrary number of hidden volumes in a file. It is implausible to reveal the encrypted data without the password, but is it possible to prove there is encrypted data where you claim there's not? If I give someone one file containing random data and another containing data encrypted with AES, will he be able to tell which is which?"

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  1. Re:It's all about entropy by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 0, Troll

    Real steganography would replace the nearly random least significant bits

    Someone should read up on modern steganography and watermarking techniques before making statements like that...

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    Palm trees and 8